Day-44-101 Day Reading Challenge-Develop your Talent--Who will cry when you die
Day-44-101 day Reading Challenge- a Mine2Shine initiative-9789186428
Develop Your Talents
Norman
Cousins once noted that “The Tragedy of life is not death, but what we let die
inside of us while we live.” In a similar vein, Ashley Montagu wrote that “The
deepest personal defeat suffered by human beings is constituted by the
difference between what one was capable of becoming and what one has in fact
become.”
There
is a difference between simply existing and truly living. There is a
distinction between simply surviving and really thriving. The sad thing is that
most people have lost sight of the human gifts that lie within them and have
resigned themselves to spending the best years of their lives watching television
in a subdivision.
In
my speeches, I often use the following story drawn from ancient Indian
mythology to remind the audience that there is an abundance of potential and
ability just waiting to be awakened within us if we will only allow it to see
the light of day. Thousands of years ago, it was believed that everyone who
walked the earth was a god. But humankind abused its limitless powers so that
supreme god decided to hide the godhead, the source of all of this potential,
so that no one could find it. The question then became, where could such a
thing be hidden? The first adviser suggested it could be placed deep in the
ground to which the supreme god replied, “No, eventually someone will dig deep
enough and find it.” The second adviser then offered, “What if we place the
godhead at the bottom of the deepest ocean” to which the supreme god responded,
“No, eventually someone will dive deep enough and find it.” The third adviser
then chimed in, “Well, why don’t we put it on the top of the highest mountain?”
which prompted the supreme god to reply, “No, I’m certain that eventually
someone will scale that highest of peaks and find it.” After reflecting for
some time, the supreme god found the solution:
“I
will put this source of all human power, potential and purpose inside the
hearts of every man, woman and child on the planet, for they will never think
to look there.”
In
all my work with employees of organizations across North America, I see the
same thing: too many people spend more time
focusing on their weakness rather than developing their strengths. By concentrating on what they don’t have, they neglect the
talents they do have. The greatest people who have gone before us all had a
simple strategy that ensured their success: they knew themselves. They made the
time to reflect on their core abilities – those special qualities that made
them unique – and spent the rest of their lives refining and expanding them.
You see, we are all endowed with the capacity for genius. Perhaps you have just
not taken the time to discover what your personal gifts are and then honed them
to the level where you are considered
brilliant.
Are
you using the best within you to its fullest capacity? If not, you are not only
doing yourself a
disservice,
you are doing the world, and all those within it who could benefit from your
unique talents, a disservice. Ruskin put it this way, “The weakest among us has
a gift, however seemingly trivial, which is peculiar to him and which worthily
used will be a gift also to his race.”
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